Eugene P. Kennedy
Eugene Patrick Kennedy (1919–2011)[1] was an American biochemist known for his work on lipid metabolism and membrane function.[2] He attended DePaul University and then became a PhD student at the University of Chicago. From 1959 to 1993 he worked at Harvard Medical School.[3][4]
Awards
- 1958 Pfizer Award in Enzyme Chemistry
- 1976 Gairdner Foundation International Award
- 1986 Passano Award
- 1986 Heinrich Wieland Prize[5]
- 1992 William C. Rose Award[6]
gollark: <@286592834923134976> https://qntm.org/destroy
gollark: I don't really electronics, but I don't think it actually *has* some fixed amount of power as such.
gollark: Power, which is energy per time.
gollark: Yes, for some silly reason you're not meant to chain SI prefixes like that.
gollark: If you mix various color dyes, you can get black. Obviously light works that way too.
References
- ASBMB.org obituary
- Giorgio Semenza; Anthony J. Turner (2005). A History of Biochemistry: Selected Topics in the History of Biochemistry - Personal Recollections IX. Gulf Professional Publishing. p. 82. ISBN 978-0-444-51866-8.
- PNAS obituary
- The Journal of Biological Chemistry
- Heinrich Wieland Prize site
- "William C. Rose Award". ASBMB.org. Retrieved 2012-08-01.
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